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Animal eggs not a good source for embryonic stem cells: study
         by Mira Oberman Mira Oberman - Mon Feb 2, 1:28 pm ET
 AFP/Getty Images/File - Stem cell cultures are held up in a US lab. A study 
has found that eggs from cows, rabbits and other .
CHICAGO (AFP) - A study published Monday has found that eggs from cows, 
rabbits and other animals are not a good source for creating embryonic stem 
cells, the master material that could one day repair tissue damage, replace 
organs, and reverse degenerative diseases.
But, in the same study, US researchers made a significant advance in the 
cloning of human embryos, which could be a path to producing a host of 
patient-specific treatments.
"This study shows for the very first time that cloning really works and that 
DNA is reprogrammed," said co-author Robert Lanza, the chief scientific 
officer at Advanced Cell Technology.
Lanza and his team were able to replace the nucleus of a number of embryos 
and bring the clones to the morula stage, where they had divided into eight 
to 16 cells.
In the human embryos, they were able to prove that the DNA was reprogrammed 
because the same genes were activated as in a normal embryo.
But something went wrong when the nuclei of rabbit, mice and cow embryos 
were replaced with a human nucleus.
"We would get these beautiful little embryos but it wouldn't work: instead 
of turning on the right genes the animal eggs would turn them off," Lanza 
told AFP.
Researchers had hoped that cloned animal eggs could be used to create human 
embryonic stem cells, which are highly versatile, primitive cells capable of 
developing into any tissue of the body.
The dream is to coax these cells into becoming lab-dish replacements for 
heart, liver, skin, eye, brain, nerve and other cells destroyed by disease, 
accidents, war or normal wear-and-tear.
Scientists have found two potential ways to avoid the dangers of organ or 
tissue rejection.
The most promising method is to reprogram skin cells so they behave like 
embryonic stem cells. But these "induced pluripotent stem cells" (iPS) are 
currently created using harmful viruses and are not safe for clinical use.
Cloning embryos so that they have the same DNA or tissue type as the patient 
could be safe for clinical use.
But researchers have not yet derived an embryonic stem cell line from a 
cloned embryo or found an efficient way to clone human embryos.
There had been hope that the animal eggs could be used as a substitute for 
human embryos, which are difficult to harvest and controversial to use.
"This very important paper suggests that livestock oocytes (the cells from 
which eggs develop) are extremely unlikely to be suitable as recipients for 
use in human nuclear transfer," said Ian Wilmut, director of the Centre for 
Regenerative Medicine in Edinburgh and editor-in-chief of Cloning and Stem 
Cells, which published the paper.
"This is very disappointing because it would mean that production of 
patient-specific stem cells by this means would be impracticable."
Working with human embryos is also impractical because the high failure rate 
means it takes hundreds of eggs to create a single stem cell line, said Alan 
Trounson, president of the California Institute for Regenerative Medicine.
"Most people are working on IPS cells (stem cells derived from skin) rather 
than nuclear transfer because it's so difficult to get human eggs," Trounson 
said.
"Their work is endorsing that we could use human eggs but I don't think it 
helps us, to be honest, in actually being able to do it because it doesn't 
show that it could be improved dramatically."
Trounson said human cloning can still be important in addressing some 
serious genetic diseases because it would allow for the manipulation of 
mitochondria, which run cell function and contain DNA.
But Lanza said it's too soon to give up on embryonic stem cell research.
"We need to continue research on both fronts because we don't know if IPS 
cells or cloning will be better," he said.
"It's good to have a backup approach."

Rayilyn Brown
Director AZNPF
Arizona Chapter National Parkinson Foundation
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